Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:05):
NBC News Radio. I'm Lisa Carton, a Republican lawmaker, is
defending Secretary of War Pete Hegseth amid controversy over strikes
against alleged drug boats in the Caribbean. During an interview
with NBC's Meet the Press, Senator Tom Cotton of Arkansas said,
everyone on the boats are all valid targets.
Speaker 2 (00:23):
Of course, before our military conducts such a strike, they
give high confidence that everyone on that vote is a
foreign drug trafficker.
Speaker 1 (00:31):
Heg Seth has also come out recently to defend the strikes.
President Trump's war secretary gave a speech Saturday at an
event in California and claimed the eighty people who've been
killed in the strikes since September were considered terrorists and
that the president can take military action as he sees fit.
Russia is bombarding a Ukrainian city with missiles, just hours
(00:52):
after peace talks to end the war were held in
the US. Ukrainian President Vladimir Zelensky said he had a
very constructive phone call with Presents and Trump's negotiating team
on Saturday. Early today, a city in central Ukraine said
it was under attack by a Russian airstrike. It's unclear
if there were any casualties. More peace talks will be
held Monday, when leaders from the UK, France and Germany
(01:14):
meet with Zelenski in London. Much of the country is
in the grips of an arctic blast. Forecasts say today's
lows include thirty three in Atlanta, twenty seven in Kansas City,
and twenty five in Chicago. It's even colder further north,
with a temperature dropping to zero degrees in Minneapolis and
minus eight in Bismarck. The Midwest and the northern Plains
(01:35):
will see freezing tempts throughout the day, with today's highs
only reaching the low twenties in Louisville and Pittsburgh. On Monday,
the polar plunge will shift east, creating highs of only
twenty seven in New York City and eighteen degrees in Vermont.
And Today marks the eighty fourth anniversary of the attack
on Pearl Harbor. Solemn ceremonies are being held in Honolulu
(01:56):
this morning. You're listening to the Latest on NBC Radio.
Speaker 3 (02:02):
One of the best ways to build a healthier local
economy is by shopping locally. Teamster advantage is a Shop
Local program started by Teamster Local nineteen thirty two that
is brought together hundreds of locally owned businesses to provide
discounts for residents who make shopping locally their priority. Everything
from restaurants like Corkies, to fund times at SB Raceway,
(02:26):
and much much more. If you're not currently a Teamster
and you want access to these local business discounts, contact
Jennifer at nine oh nine eight eight nine eight three
seven seven Extension two twenty four. Give her a call.
That number again is nine oh nine eight eight nine
(02:46):
eight three seven seven Extension two twenty four.
Speaker 4 (02:55):
Celebrate the holiday season with Inland Pacific Ballets. The Nutcracker,
set to Tchaikovsky's classic score, follow Clara from the Land
of Snow through the Kingdom of Sweets with more than
eighty dancers and special guest artists, exquisite sets, costumes, and
cherished scenes. A must see holiday tradition.
Speaker 5 (03:18):
For all ages.
Speaker 4 (03:20):
Experience so Cow's signature holiday production with four performances at
Bridges Auditorium in Claremont on December thirteenth and fourteenth, and
three at Fox Performing Arts Center in Riverside on December
twentieth and twenty first tickets are available at ipballet dot org.
That's ip ballet Dota.
Speaker 6 (03:53):
Every golfer has the same problem. Dirty club faces, caked
on dirt, ruins your spin, kills your accuracy, and adds
strokes you don't need. So for this holiday season, give
the golfer in your life a cleaner game. It's called
Clean and Hit, the portable, rechargeable golf club cleaner that
keeps every iron spotless and ready to perform. Set it
(04:16):
on the ground or clip it to your card, Hit
the button and the power reversible brush does the work
for you. No mess, no fuss, just clean clubs and
pure shots. But here's the catch. Only a few thousand
units are arriving before Christmas, and once they're gone, that's
it until next year. So pre order now at cleananhit
(04:38):
dot com. That's cleaninhit dot com and guarantee the perfect
golf gift of twenty twenty five. That's cleananhit dot com.
Clean clubs, better shots, better game.
Speaker 7 (04:52):
So cal moves fast. Your business should too. If you're
not on the first page of search results, you're losing customers.
Ilocal has helped businesses in sokel and dominate search results
since two thousand and nine. Get a free side analysis
for a limited time. Ilocal SOCl businesses start here, Get frowned,
be chosen. Call three one zero eight seven zero three
(05:16):
three three one. That's three one zero eight seven zero
three three three one, or visit ilocal dot net forward
slash SoCal. That's ilocal dot net forward slash SoCal.
Speaker 8 (05:28):
For over seventy five years, the Marine Toys for Tots
program has provided toys and emotional support to economically disadvantaged children,
primarily during the holidays. But needs are not just seasonal,
and now neither is Toys for Tots. They've expanded their
outreach to support families in need all year long with
their new programs, including the Foster Care Initiative, the Native
(05:51):
American Program, and the Youth Ambassador program. To learn how
you can help, visit Toys for Toots dot org KCAA.
Speaker 2 (06:04):
Hi, folks, it's Milan Vukovich from the Tahibo Tea Club.
We just received the first shipment since the new tariffs,
and because our tea is harvested deepen the Brazilian rainforest,
we had to pay a fifty percent import tariff just
to release it. Once we run out of our current
inventory prices will go up right now. You can still
stalk up at today's pre tariff prices by calling us
(06:24):
at eight one eight six one zero eight zero eight
eight one pounds of original Peter Powder r Co Tahibo
t is forty nine to ninety five, or take advantage
of a multipac discount such as buy three pounds get
one free. That's a four pack discount of twenty five
percent for one forty nine ninety five. Or buy five
pounds get three free that's an eight pack discount to
(06:47):
thirty eight percent for two forty nine ninety five. Stock
up now call us at eight one eight six one
zero eight zero eight eight or visit Tahibota Club dot
com that's eight one eight six one zero eight zero
eight eight.
Speaker 5 (07:05):
Publisher Legal notice in West Side Story newspaper for the
best service and the best rates called nine o nine
three eight four eight one three one. Publishing legal notices
in the City and County of San Bernardino. Since nineteen ninety,
West Side Story provides friendly expert service called nine oh
nine three eight four eight one three one to benefit
from budget friendly rates, whether a fictitious business name, a
(07:27):
name change, a divorced summons, or any other legal or
public notice called West Side Story Newspaper. Nine oh nine
three eight four eight one three one. Nine oh nine
three eight four eight one three one. That's nine oh
nine three eight four eight one three.
Speaker 9 (07:44):
One California, Southern California. Empire Wherever the people respond to
(08:34):
this is Empire talks back. I'm Wallace Allen here in
southern California speaking to the world. Beautiful day for us today,
Beautiful day for you too, wherever you are. You know why,
I know because you are able to say here when
we do roll calls. If you're able to say here,
(08:56):
that's a pretty that's a pretty powerful thing here. It
means you have the ability of responsibility check that out,
ability and respond sibility, ability to do something, respond ability,
respond to something. I don't know if that's the way
(09:16):
they intended it, but hell, that's the way my ears here.
That's you know, that's what inspires us. What we hear,
what we interpret, what we take out of the situation.
You know, the same thing that makes somebody happy can
make someone else sad, and someone else from the viewpoint
(09:37):
outside look at it and wonder why either one of them,
either one of them cares about it. Life is interesting.
Life is uh funny, and I don't mean laugh ha
ha ha funny, it's funny. And that you can predict,
you can wish, you can pray, you can metaphysically make
(10:04):
things appear to happen in your favor. If you have
faith and patience, if you have a dream, you may
be able to make that dream manifest itself. I heard
a guy say something that I thought was extremely revealing.
(10:27):
He said, the harder I work, the luckier I get. Okay,
makes sense, but how we see things really motivates us
to deal with things in our own special way, and
(10:49):
our own special way has to be regarded as something
that is important to us. We have to respond. We
have to decide what's important, We have to decide what's interesting. Well,
there's so much that, like Uncle Wellington used to say
to Uncle Welldington is the uncle of my good friend
(11:14):
Louise Howard, that is no longer with us on Earth's side.
She certainly spiritually attached Uncle Wellington was our anchor of wisdom.
She would and we would always refer to Uncle Wellington
as though he were at the table. You know, what
would you do, Uncle Wellington, and pretty much it was
(11:34):
always the same answer in our minds because Uncle Wellington
was the one who coined the phrase understand the difference
between what's interesting and what's important. Interesting things certainly take
our attention to make us think a lot, and you know,
make maybe their distractions, and maybe they're simply attractions, But
(11:59):
are they important? Are they critical? Are they something that
is going to affect our life stream as opposed to
our lifetime which is like a stop sign or turn left,
turn right. But if it's not in your stream, if
it's not going where you want to go, you know,
it'll still be interesting and something that you could talk
(12:22):
about in your conversations in the future, you know, like
the time you slipped and fell down the cliff and
we're lucky enough not to die. You broke a leg
or two or three, maybe you bumped into somebody else interesting,
but not in your life stream life. It's an interruption.
(12:45):
So what was important this week? What happened to you
this week? What did you see take place this week?
Could be political, it could be personal, It could be
to the world, it could be but something happened that
cut your attention that you thought was good. Probably something
(13:10):
cut your attention to that you thought was not so good.
Either way, we're left with the same consequence, the same procedure,
property proper properer decision that we have to make about
which way to go. So I think we have our
friend with us today is Macarron. Yeah, Macrome, Macrome? How
(13:35):
you doing, buddy? All right?
Speaker 10 (13:37):
And how are the people doing out here in southern California, Oh,
the rest of the world, since we're streaming live, how's
everybody doing?
Speaker 9 (13:46):
I think that because we're in southern California, we can't
help but look outside and regardless of what was happening,
met bill overdue, that late payment, that belly ate from
enjoying too much fish or shrimp for sake in lobster
or belly because you didn't have your peanut butter and jelly.
Sunday morning in southern California is beautiful and it makes
(14:08):
you feel good, and it gives you promise of what
could be if it isn't the way you want it
to be, And it makes you feel good about what happened,
if you enjoyed what happened. But I think Southern California
is a great place to be almost any morning especially
a morning like today. How do you feel?
Speaker 10 (14:30):
And I know, Wallace, you sent me the questions last night,
and I thought about him a lot, and I said
to myself, what has been the most important thing that
happened this week, both good or bad? And I don't
usually do that, so I appreciate you for sending me
(14:50):
that question. I think that the best news that I've
heard this week is actually the off year elections where
Republicans lost. They lost a Trump county that he had
won by twenty two percent. Well, actually they won the election,
(15:12):
but they lost so much percentage of their voters that
it's good news for Democrats, it's good news for independence,
and it's good news for Americans period.
Speaker 11 (15:23):
So that was the best news I've seen today.
Speaker 10 (15:26):
That and Bellow truck approval rating is that thirty five
percent right now?
Speaker 11 (15:32):
I think this week that's that's the best news that
I could hear.
Speaker 9 (15:39):
You know, they did not have Do you play the lotto?
Speaker 11 (15:46):
Well when it gets big like it is right now,
I do.
Speaker 9 (15:49):
Okay, Okay, I just just one of.
Speaker 10 (15:53):
Those guys who who holds up the line at the
convenience store playing a lotto.
Speaker 11 (15:59):
I'm not that guy.
Speaker 9 (16:00):
Not that guy. But but you do understand, yes, yeah, yeah.
And I'm one of those guys too, And I say, well,
they're right. You can't win if you don't play.
Speaker 11 (16:11):
That's correct.
Speaker 9 (16:12):
And and and for ninety nine point ninety nine point
of those people who play, they can't win it either,
but they play.
Speaker 11 (16:27):
You know, so this mark can't spend itself.
Speaker 9 (16:31):
Well, no it can't. But let's mark. Let's let's mark
down your two your two statements before we get into
deep conversation.
Speaker 10 (16:42):
Yeah, number one, has Republicans lost a lot of ground
in the off year elections? And number two is Donald
Trump has a thirty five percent approval rating.
Speaker 11 (16:53):
Those are my two best news events of this week.
Speaker 9 (16:59):
I could I could make the short uh interpretation to
that and say something like the Republicans is going.
Speaker 11 (17:07):
Down and you may be correct.
Speaker 9 (17:10):
No, no, no, I'm just you know, as if I
had to put it in a couple of words.
Speaker 10 (17:16):
I'm into the prediction business. As a stand up comedian,
I like to do things on stage. I like to
push the envelope, and to be honest with you, I'm
saying things like that on stage, the Republicans are losing ground.
Speaker 9 (17:31):
Okay, okay, let's hang in here.
Speaker 10 (17:33):
Uh.
Speaker 9 (17:33):
That that's our West coast, beautiful southern California weather report
from mister macrom our comedian, our activists, our longtime friend
of the show. Uh. And we're gonna head down to
the east coast to where we will be speaking to
Miss Michela lloy Alan Archibald Murray, my daughter, Missy boot Okay, okay,
(18:06):
I want to I want to do something to bring
you up out of the water there. You sound like
you're you're can Can we do something there or maybe
get you a little closer to the mic or what
is it? Okay, that's that's that's better. That's much better.
Did you get a chance to put together your answer
(18:29):
for the worst news? The worst news and the best
news from.
Speaker 10 (18:34):
The worst news that I have this week for the
people listening is the Supreme Court is actually contemplating reversing
the American voters rights at their contemplating Section two right now.
And I think that is going to eliminate several congressional
(18:55):
seats that are usually occupied by black Americans. That's that's
my worst news, okay.
Speaker 9 (19:02):
And and so we're we're definitely in a political uh news. Yeah, yeah,
it's okay. Miss you.
Speaker 12 (19:11):
So, so we're talking, so we're talking about Texas.
Speaker 13 (19:13):
Is that what you mean them upholding their right to
go ahead and change the districting around so that they.
Speaker 9 (19:19):
Can get those extra That is uh, that is the response. Yeah,
that's responding to that Texas news.
Speaker 5 (19:26):
Uh.
Speaker 9 (19:26):
Let's bring yeah, let's bring Missy's voice up a little bit. Okay, mister,
what is your best and worst?
Speaker 13 (19:34):
Well, you know, for me here in Florida, you know,
and a lot of people give Florida a bad reputation
because of the governor, the government and all of these things.
But Florida is also people to express themselves. This week
has been art Basle week. So for me, what's been
(19:56):
exciting is to see I saw a really well art
exhibition that was twenty five. It became the most popular.
It became the most popular exhibition this week. And it's
out on Miami Beach, and so many people come here
to party during Basil week now, and they're right, all
the different brands come.
Speaker 12 (20:14):
But this artist created.
Speaker 13 (20:16):
An outdoor book, like an outdoor library.
Speaker 9 (20:22):
I'm going to interrupt you for a minute. We're going
to take a short break. I want to try to
work on Missis's line a little bit so we can
hear her better. Okay, let's do and take a short break,
and we're going to come back and let's see how
that line is working, and we'll consider looking forward to
hearing her worst and best of what's going on there
(20:45):
on the East Coast that has affected her, and then
we'll get a chance to do a little cross discussion here.
Macrome has pointed out a couple of things. One that
the Republican Party is lose a little bit of Ben Florence,
and he thought that was the best news, and the
worst news was the Supreme Court decision to support Texas's
(21:10):
desire to read district toward total Republican representation at their
congressional seating. We'll be back after this shortback Brick.
Speaker 5 (21:32):
Publish your legal notice in west Side Story newspaper for
the best service and the best rates called nine o
nine three eight four eight one three one. Publishing legal
notices in the City and County of San Bernardino since
nineteen ninety, West Side Story provides friendly expert service called
nine oh nine three eight four eight one three one.
To benefit from budget friendly rates, whether a fictitious business name,
(21:54):
a name change, a divorced summons or any other legal
or public notice called West Side Storrer newspaper. Nine O
nine three eight four eight one three one nine O
nine three eight four eight one three one. That's nine
O nine three eight four eight one three one.
Speaker 9 (22:25):
All right, this is up our talks back now Wallace Allen.
We are discussing the best and the worst of the week.
I've talked to mister Mac rome here representing the view,
the weather, view, the point of view here on the
West Coast, our longtime friend, a man of the stage
of comedy stage and a man who is a great thinker, philosopher.
(22:48):
And you hear that when you get with him on
this stage. Mac, How can people see you once the
next time you're performing?
Speaker 10 (22:56):
Actually, I have a show coming up next weekend on
December the twelfth in San Diego. I'm not sure exactly
where it's at. Somebody just booked me for that this morning.
But I do have a podcast, and you can check
out my podcast, and we've got seven episodes up now.
We're working on number eight, number nine this weekend, this
(23:18):
very weekend, as we speak in you will be able
to upload episode nine and ten of Liquid Politics with
Macromans on YouTube. My YouTube channel is Tyrone Thompson thirty
seven ninety three and that's where you can find a
lot of my comedy clips and also you can find
(23:40):
my podcast there Tyrone Thompson thirty seven ninety three.
Speaker 9 (23:45):
Thirty seven ninety three.
Speaker 11 (23:47):
And that's on YouTube.
Speaker 10 (23:48):
Now, if you follow that channel, you're going to get
the podcast, but you're also going to get a whole
lot of just raw comedy footage. I've been a nationwide
track comedian for the last fifteen years, and so I
just started dabbling into podcasts and things like this and
(24:09):
radio with you, mister Wallace Allen for the last three
or four years.
Speaker 11 (24:16):
But I have a long catalog of comedy excellent.
Speaker 9 (24:21):
That's one of the things that is exciting to me
about the fact that you have a podcast and are
inviting people to come on a regular basis says that
you are on the cutting edge of conversation and the
description of that viewpoint because one thing, you know, it's
(24:42):
one thing to go to a concert and hear a
musician or artist sing the same song that you've been
singing at the house, you know, and you get there
and it's a reward to be able to sing it
with them, but you know, it's not a reward to
know the punchline the joke. So the fact that you
(25:04):
are able to be a comedian a man who depends
on the joke uh and adjusting the punchline and making
them relevant and uh current is a good thing. And
(25:25):
I haven't been able to get on your hear you
on your podcast, but I'll be checking it out because
I have a big respect for your viewpoint and I
definitely like to laugh and you You've made me laugh
a lot of times on this program. Brother, I appreciate it.
Speaker 11 (25:40):
Oh well, you definitely you need to.
Speaker 10 (25:42):
Let look at the podcast, the episodes that I do
have up.
Speaker 9 (25:46):
I try and mix it with.
Speaker 10 (25:48):
Humor and uh political current events. It's it's pretty good.
I have to tell you the truth. I have somebody
I admire. His name is Reese Waters and you can
check him out on YouTube. All so, and I kind
of like pattern my podcast after him. I like to
(26:10):
be politically current, but it's it's not something that you
would hear when I'm doing stand up comedy.
Speaker 11 (26:16):
I don't mix the two the podcast. What you hear
from me on the podcast is not.
Speaker 10 (26:21):
Going to be the same thing that you hear from
me in stand up comedy, and I'm also going to
be rated R when I'm doing stand up comedy.
Speaker 11 (26:30):
And I'm ready pretty pretty PG on the podcast.
Speaker 9 (26:33):
Okay, miss you on how's your how how's your voice?
How are you feeling? Let me hear you? Oh it
is it.
Speaker 12 (26:44):
Is Your audio is the problem.
Speaker 9 (26:47):
Okay, Okay, I'll take I'll take I'll take that. I'll
take that exact It just sounded like to just that.
But that's okay. Come up a little bit tighter if
you can't, but tell us let us hear again. Let's
take off where we were before. You were telling us
(27:07):
about an artist there in so Miami, and I think
we're talking about the worst thing that happened or the
best thing that happened, No.
Speaker 12 (27:16):
The best thing.
Speaker 13 (27:16):
So Miami Arty is something that we do every year
where artists from all over the world are sponsored, and
they have galleries all over Miami Beach and Wynn Wood,
and they also have an area called Black Basov Patian
artists and African artists and all kinds of art installations.
Speaker 12 (27:35):
But the one that really caught my attention this time is.
Speaker 13 (27:38):
One called the Library of Us and basically, this artist
from Great Britain named s Devlin, Yes, Devlin.
Speaker 12 (27:49):
Put set up a fifty foot installation.
Speaker 13 (27:52):
It's it's like a triangle, but it's built with twenty
five hundred books from various authors over the last hundred
years from all over the world, of all kinds of
different politics and mindsets and thoughts. And it's called the
Library of Us. And it's on a rotating installation in
(28:14):
look of water and basically you can sit and the
books has been around and they put different books.
Speaker 12 (28:20):
Out and they comps to you. I'll send you the
links so you can see it.
Speaker 13 (28:22):
But what I really loved about it is that the
artist's inspiration was the fact that ideas find ways to coexist.
Different ideas, different thoughts, different beliefs, different politics, whether they
agree with one another or not, find a way to
all coexists in one place, the Library of Us. So
(28:46):
the power of the the power of our history, the
power of our ideas, and the idea that we don't
have to take one away in order to present our own.
So very quietly, it just shows that.
Speaker 14 (29:00):
Pull so much power did shape the world and and
how people are able to express what's going on in
their culture, what's going on in their community.
Speaker 12 (29:12):
Everything doesn't happen.
Speaker 9 (29:14):
That's a that's that's amazing, is it? With that exhibition?
Did they also prepare or make available a list of
the books that composed that the layout of the library
of us for all of us who are not able
to get to Miami.
Speaker 13 (29:36):
So I'll have to send you that link because in fact,
today's the last day of the exhibit. So can you
imagine all of it is going to be unpacked, I
mean packed.
Speaker 12 (29:44):
Back and put away. I don't know if they're going
to take it somewhere.
Speaker 13 (29:49):
It really deserves to be so, but it's just again
very quietly in the middle of the news by holes
and the politics and all of the and.
Speaker 9 (30:01):
Who was the artist?
Speaker 12 (30:03):
S devlin es like egg and Sam E s Devlin
d l I N.
Speaker 9 (30:10):
Do you have time to try to reach out to uh?
Is that a female? A male or female? Do you
have the opportunity or access to try to reach out
to her and find out the question the answer to
those questions?
Speaker 13 (30:26):
No, I don't, but I know that there is a
list and there is the information about the exhibition, so
I can send you that.
Speaker 12 (30:32):
I just don't have it in front of me.
Speaker 9 (30:34):
Okay, and if you could send me some type of
something that may lead toward a contact at least even
the library space that maybe the people who booked her.
Speaker 12 (30:45):
It is literally on the beach, in front of the fatal.
Speaker 9 (30:48):
Hotel on the beach.
Speaker 12 (30:49):
It is on the beach she still has.
Speaker 9 (30:52):
That's even more critical. Yeah, she had to get permission
from somebody or somebody there securing that. Yeah. Yeah, let's
try to catch that before the water washes it away
the tide and all of that stuff sounds.
Speaker 12 (31:09):
And it is amazing.
Speaker 13 (31:10):
And like I said to me, it's a thing because
you hear so much about them trying to stifle creatives,
ban certain books, shut down ideas, you know, erase history,
as they say, And very quietly, she's just said, well,
they're twenty five hundred books right here. You basically it
(31:31):
almost saying.
Speaker 12 (31:32):
Well, you can take one, but you can't kill all
of them.
Speaker 9 (31:35):
Yeah, and yeah, that sounds like some of the best
news and could quickly become some of the worst news
because of the disassembling of the books. And if they
don't have a list, and if we're not able to
assemble those thoughts at least in the future without assembling the.
Speaker 13 (31:53):
Books, so no, that's always be here. They're not limited editions.
They're not there are books that have just been collected
from all over the world here for the installation, but
there are copies in libraries everywhere. So that's why it's
called the Library of us because, for example, maybe somewhere
in South Carolina, you only have.
Speaker 12 (32:13):
Certain books there because there are only certain things you want.
Speaker 9 (32:16):
So all of us probably have much better access with
the list, and then to attempt to find a book
online or something, thats very good, very good. What's the
worst thing that you saw that test grabs you this week?
Speaker 13 (32:33):
I think the worst thing that grabbed me this week
is that we're still actually having a conversation about whether
or not heg SSTH it's qualified, and whether or not
cash Hotel is qualified no matter what they do, and
they keep drawing the parallels between, you know, the times
that they call for Hillary Clinton's head over her email
(32:54):
game and the fact that this man can text things
and put things in the wrong what's that groups and
accidentally send his dry cleaner information about air strikes and
then brag about it. And then when people say, well
I don't even think that's legal, he said, well, I
don't know if I did it. You know, I think
this government, this this administration continues to just be the
(33:16):
worst thing I've seen because everyone can see it.
Speaker 10 (33:19):
Okay, like wow, so well on a second though, but
I mean, like, is it is it?
Speaker 11 (33:29):
Is it good that like if they're better at concealing it.
Speaker 12 (33:33):
No about concealing it.
Speaker 13 (33:35):
It's about the fact that this man could just sit
at a table and just few some of the most
ridiculous things that we've ever heard about some allians about,
you know, and to the world.
Speaker 12 (33:47):
This is a merit to the world.
Speaker 13 (33:50):
This is our administration, That's what I mean, because it
doesn't you know, weak is one thing. Stupid is a
whole nother thing. Demented is a whole nother thing. Completely
unqualified to be where you are and do what you
do is a whole nother thing. And so yeah, if
this is supposed to represent us, it is the worst
(34:11):
thing I've seen.
Speaker 9 (34:12):
Now, Okay, Okay, that that that's.
Speaker 11 (34:18):
Very very quickly.
Speaker 9 (34:19):
I am I am a veteran.
Speaker 10 (34:21):
I have fought in the war for this country, and
I completely agree with you about Pete xth I completely
agree with you there. I just think that my experience
being a veteran and fighting in foreign wars. I know
that this is what America truly is. And a lot
(34:44):
of people are getting the wool pulled off of their
eyes or however you want to say it. But like
what what what these guys are doing has been happening
for decades and now everyone is seeing it.
Speaker 9 (34:57):
So there is little surprise to you as a veteran
to see a war crime. Uh is this?
Speaker 10 (35:06):
Uh? Is that?
Speaker 11 (35:07):
You know?
Speaker 10 (35:08):
What is? I think the most interesting thing about that
they could not do the work crime as long as
a black admiral was in office. They had to move
him out of office. His name was Alvin Halsey. Yes,
by the way, the honorable Admiral High Halsey. I solute
you for a job well done, sir. He did the
(35:30):
right thing.
Speaker 11 (35:31):
He got out. Because we are in money tunes world,
our administration, our current government.
Speaker 10 (35:39):
We are in looney tune world, I mean, and.
Speaker 9 (35:44):
We're and we're in YouTube world where everybody can see
the looney tune shows.
Speaker 12 (35:49):
I think looneyes could be offended.
Speaker 9 (35:53):
Well you're yeah, I think you're right. But here here's
here's here's here's what's so critical because everything that we're
saying about the observation of the insanity that these people
are operating with, the insanity that our elected officials are
(36:14):
acquiescing to the ultimate insanity that we as a people
are observing, and what are we gonna do? Because that's
what's interesting. What's important is the what are we gonna do?
Speaker 15 (36:31):
Part?
Speaker 9 (36:32):
And I'm excited because I'm talking to two people directly
on the phone here, mac and Michea, both of whom
that I know, have handled not just encountered, but handled
(36:52):
highly pressurized personal situations, highly pressurized social situation and done
it with a smile and the drive that demonstrates the
faith that this is expected because God told me there's
a devil here, but God told me, and so I
(37:15):
have faith that I'm gonna make it. And I have
high respect for both of you for that, and I
have a desire to hear from you some kind of
solution for the fact that we know we have a
blind man driving us through the cliffs. He's blind. He's blind.
(37:39):
He's blind because his eyes are closed. Whether he could
see or not, he's driving us through the cliffs, and
we're riding in the bus. We're watching, we're watching him
go to sleep. At the Helm.
Speaker 10 (37:54):
Mich I'm let you take that one off first, because
I got a lot to say about it.
Speaker 13 (38:01):
Well, there are certain things that immediately come to mind
based on my knowledge of the government and the shadow
government and the different things that can and cannot do
when it finds itself in situations that I know if.
Speaker 12 (38:13):
I say publicly on the air may result in a visit.
Speaker 13 (38:18):
So I will say this, I have a policy. You
give it all you've gotten, and you give God room
to move. I saw this coming a year ago, and
I've set all year and kind of just watch and watch,
knowing and saying to people, this has passed for an
(38:40):
expiration day. This is not sustainable, and it's just a
matter of the right people recognizing that it's not sustainable
and then doing what they can do about it.
Speaker 12 (38:51):
This is not something right now that can be resolved
by an element.
Speaker 13 (38:55):
Unfortunately, it's not even well because of an election is
not imediately imminent.
Speaker 12 (39:01):
That's what I mean. We're not in an election cycle.
Speaker 13 (39:03):
We can't just vote him out, and I don't think
we can wait until it's election time. So I think
that there needs to be a certain set of people
who have the ability to handle this outside of the
parameters of an election, and to go in and handle
it because I think he is not.
Speaker 12 (39:26):
Cognitively qualified.
Speaker 13 (39:30):
I think that he's not passing any kind of real
physical and I think that someone needs to go in
and challenge his competency.
Speaker 12 (39:42):
But how you go.
Speaker 13 (39:43):
About doing that? That's not something that the people can
make a lot of noise about it. But there's someone that,
literally you talk about driving off a cliff, there's someone
who has the ability enough to take the keys.
Speaker 11 (39:55):
In this eraca.
Speaker 9 (39:56):
So there's somebody's sitting close to the.
Speaker 12 (39:58):
Driver, close enough to the driver.
Speaker 9 (40:01):
Well, there's that Amendment twenty five or section twenty five
that allows the people who are working for the president
his inner staff to stand up and say, dude, is
dude is that?
Speaker 11 (40:17):
Well?
Speaker 10 (40:17):
I mean, you're asking for a bunch of crazy people
to point out another crazy man, to say he's crazy.
Speaker 9 (40:22):
They're all crazy up there.
Speaker 11 (40:24):
Well okay, okay.
Speaker 12 (40:29):
What's the problem is? See there?
Speaker 9 (40:33):
But see but see we know that. See see how
quickly you both see how quickly you both responded to
my pointing to the person closest to the driver to
be the one to say, hey, he's asleep. Hey, we're not.
So I have I have, we we.
Speaker 10 (40:52):
Know the opinion. I have a different opinion of who
is closest to the driver, you see. I honestly, what
it's going to come down to is we are governed
by ourselves as American people, and we're kind of distanced
from the fact that these people govern us by.
Speaker 11 (41:10):
Our own our own.
Speaker 10 (41:16):
We give them permission to govern us, and they've got
it flipped around so bad right now that they think
they can just tell the people you're going to be
governed by us, period. These Republicans are trying to jurymander
themselves in the permanent power. As Mitchell said earlier, They're
(41:37):
trying to do things that they're not They're not obeying
the rules, and we have to wake up and the
people are the closest person to the driver. This guy
is a nut.
Speaker 9 (41:49):
I have to.
Speaker 10 (41:49):
Disagree with mister Will a little bit about the elections.
We just saw the power of the elections last week.
We're going to see the power of the elections again
in this offcoming year. The off year elections is what
they call them. I know, but what I'm saying is
what I'm saying is we still have the power right
(42:13):
now to elect the Congress that will impeach this man
and will investigate all the people who are around him,
all the crazies. We still have the power to do that.
We must participate in these elections. We must participate in
these million the no Kings marches. We have to do that.
(42:37):
We are the person sitting next to the driver. We
have to each one of us has to take responsibility
from how we're living in this.
Speaker 11 (42:47):
Country right now. And that's the real truth.
Speaker 9 (42:51):
I plan.
Speaker 12 (42:53):
I agree with that part, and I agree with what
you're saying.
Speaker 13 (42:56):
What I was trying to say, though, is I don't
think this lasts until November. I don't think this can
last until November. Oh, I know this should last.
Speaker 9 (43:09):
So there are.
Speaker 13 (43:11):
Some Republicans and this is what I wanted to point out,
the same way that Marjorie Taylor Green has now threatened
to step down, I don't personally think she fully fully
wants to step down, because everything I know about a woman,
having being a woman myself, is that when a woman
is really, really really leaving and there's no way you
can change her mind, you don't get advanced notice. You
(43:33):
come home and she's gone. When a woman says to you,
I'm going to leave. What she's really saying, in the
words of the Great Tracy Chapman, it's give me one
reason to stay here, and I'll turn.
Speaker 11 (43:42):
Right back around.
Speaker 13 (43:44):
So, but what that has caused is some conversations with
other Republican congress people who are looking at their constituents
and going, wait a minute, I'm going to have to
come back and.
Speaker 12 (43:57):
Face these people at some point, and this.
Speaker 13 (43:59):
Guy is not protect me, and so some of them
are already considering again before it gets to the point
where I have to stand for reelection, I need to
demonstrate that I am working for my constituents and not
for this man.
Speaker 9 (44:17):
And let me let me jump in because we're on
the quickest hour on radio. We've got about fifteen minutes
to save the world.
Speaker 12 (44:27):
Well you do have a smoker.
Speaker 9 (44:29):
Well I understand, But we are we are curving, and
we always do curve to the same point of frustrating,
of frustration as to who is going to make this
final assignment and who do we assign to handle the process?
(44:51):
We agree impeachment is the word. That's my dump Trump.
I'm ready. I've spoken to my congressman in front of
some people and ask him. You know, when are we
gonna start the you know the theme song, dump Trump?
When are we gonna start the impeachment process? Well, we
(45:13):
can't win the impeachment now because we're not in power.
Oh whoa who. I'm not gonna wait till the tire
goes all the way flat to try to get it fixed.
I see the air running out. Now. We need to
work on the tire now. We need to So, my
and Michel, you said it, I'm not sure that the
(45:35):
twenty sixth that we'll make it to November.
Speaker 12 (45:39):
No, I said, I'm not sure this can wait.
Speaker 9 (45:41):
Well, oh okay, well I hope. Well I heard. I'm
not sure that we can wait to November because I
am convinced that we cannot afford to wait till November,
because both of us, all of us expecting an election
to help be part of our selection of tools to
(46:02):
use to get rid of this situation. I think that
tool is in constant danger because I go back to
what we say from the beginning day one. He's trying
to stay out of jail. He's not Everything that we're
talking about is to stay out of jail. Now. The
(46:23):
one thing that this Venezuela deal is about. Okay, his
senses that he's not going to be able to get
people in America just raising hell with Ice. Okay, he
thought by now he would have enough sedition, enough response
to Ice to call it sedition. But we've been cool,
(46:45):
we've been able to work around Ice, and Ice has
worked against him. So now he's trying to create a war,
and a war that he can be kind of in
control of his to his neophyte mind, something that makes
him think that, well, I can't just go by him Venezuela.
Everybody's gonna and plus my oil friends will get to
(47:08):
make some money. No, it ain't that easy. But the
fact that he wants to and the Republicans are letting
him continue to do it because of their racism, this
guy is in a position to say we're at war.
I don't need to wait for Congress. Congress has allowed
me to be in charge of this. We're at war,
(47:29):
and anybody that disputes that, we're gonna put their ass
in jail. And he's got them scared enough to do that.
So I go back to the solution being and I
agree with both of you, is to ignore the prospects
of a coming election. And put the heat on for impeachment.
(47:50):
He has already done way too much that any other
president would have done that. I mean, we could have
impeached ten It is because of the stuff he's done.
Speaker 10 (48:02):
This is what I want to say. Please, you are
only in the fight that you are in at that time.
We are in the final for the solarization. Right now.
The tools that we are empty fight elections, and we
still that tool to us.
Speaker 9 (48:21):
Boy there they're working on and they're working on our
sound system. I can't hear you right now, but they can.
And they've decided to interrupt the flow. I don't know
exactly what it is or how, but they do that.
So we're going to start again, Max, start all over again.
Come a little.
Speaker 10 (48:41):
We can only use in a fight. You can only
use the tool right now the soul of this country.
Elections are still a tool that we can use. We
must encourage everyone to use that tool to fight for
this country because right now we have some people who
(49:03):
would like to eliminate your abilitique too.
Speaker 9 (49:06):
If I implied that we should not be emphasizing participating
in elections, I missed the point. Well know what I'm
saying is we should expect election and respect it. But
the way to do it is to remind our congress
people on a consistent basis that they have the right
(49:29):
to call for and impeachment every damn day because of
the fact of how he has acted. And if the
Republicans stand up and say forget it every day, then
let's remind the world that they have the opportunity to
take control every day, and every day they're deciding not to.
(49:51):
That's my suggestion, I'm but that's where I am on it.
It's like it doesn't do any good to continue to
keep notes about how ridiculous they are acting. Peach Headslift,
who could be impeach his ass first? He should be
so easy to impeach because you have to impeach me.
(50:12):
You can't fire him. The only person who could fire
him is the president. But the same people that approved
this seat can impeach him. Okay, so that's what we
can't impeach the president with right now, you would have
should have no problem impeaching Pete Pete bad heads.
Speaker 10 (50:36):
Well, you know what, That's why I said, like one
of the best news that I heard this week, where
Republicans are losing influence.
Speaker 11 (50:44):
With the electorate. It's because we are the one.
Speaker 10 (50:48):
As you said, mister Wallas Salad, we are the ones
standing next to the man in the driver's seat. Ultimately,
it is the American people who are gonna have to
be the ones to vote their sin and their congresspeople
out of office because they're not representing you.
Speaker 9 (51:06):
That's what these people.
Speaker 11 (51:08):
Are, just out front, overtly.
Speaker 10 (51:12):
Representing Trump or to forbid, I say it Apak in Israel,
but for real, these people are not working for the
American people. And that's true, and.
Speaker 9 (51:29):
We need to say it. We need to be willing
to say it long before they come at us with
these commercials. We need to make them design the commercials
saying that we are running on the issue. I will
impeach Trump that needs to be one of the affordability
to help you afford life. I will impeach Trump. If
(51:51):
they're not saying that we need to be, we haven't
done our job. Our job, and I agree with you
as as our job as citizens is to inform our
elected officials of what we want. And I'm begging, I'm
just begging you guys, just to go straight to the point.
It is Christmas. When you go sit down on Santa
(52:14):
Clausa's lap. Tell him I want to impeach Trump. When
they ask you, baby, what do you want for Christmas?
I want to impeach Trump.
Speaker 11 (52:27):
But okay, here's the question, though, what comes after Trump?
Speaker 12 (52:31):
Exactly? I think I.
Speaker 9 (52:33):
Think a very a very respectful, humble person. Okay, yet
me gas, Oh no, no, no, no, no, no no,
whoever comes upind Trump? Oh we're in motion now. Hell,
we can impeach them in about two weeks. Act crazy
on me, okay, because I got my impeachment tool working
(52:57):
and I'm trying to work my way down to somebody Trump.
Trump has given me the power to look for somebody
that will do what I want them to do. And
all I gotta do is keep it, keep drawing up
my list of what I want them to do. What
do I want them to do? I want them to
respect the Constitution? All right? Oh, what do you want
(53:18):
them to do? What's what's what's the first thing you
want them to do? Mac and Missy, what's the first
thing you want.
Speaker 11 (53:23):
Them to do?
Speaker 9 (53:26):
What you got one? You got one favorite thing? What
do you want them to do?
Speaker 10 (53:31):
I want them to a cultural government in America, said
again a multicultural representation in American government.
Speaker 9 (53:41):
Okay, so you want you want? Okay, cool, missy. What's
the first thing you want them to do?
Speaker 13 (53:46):
First of all, I want them to actually resume teaching
proper civics again, so that we haven't educated electorate. And
then I want them to require that anyone who wants
to stand for election pass a test that demonstrates they
understand what the constitution is and how it's supposed to operate.
Speaker 9 (54:08):
Okay, so you want more than one thing too.
Speaker 13 (54:10):
I've seen well, one of the things that I've seen
is too many unqualified.
Speaker 9 (54:16):
Well okay, so but but but you said two things.
You got you got a chance to say two things.
Mac only had a chance to say one, and you
said you want to get an election, and you want
the people to be qualified. That's two things, because we
can have elections and they're not qualified. Mac what's the
second thing you want?
Speaker 12 (54:33):
Qualified?
Speaker 11 (54:35):
And I want no?
Speaker 9 (54:36):
No missing. You had to, You had to. It's christmassing
out gifts. You've had your two, he's only had one. Okay,
one more gift for you.
Speaker 10 (54:47):
Mac.
Speaker 11 (54:49):
Hey, this is this is a Christmas gift.
Speaker 10 (54:51):
Yes, I think that America needs to sit back and
we haven't dealt with this racism issue for two hundred
and fifty years. I know it goes back even further
than sixteen nineteen, but we have to get this ship together.
Excuse me for my French, but this is going to
(55:12):
prevent to cut the whole nation from maturing and becoming
a better nation because we can't. We're fighting within ourselves.
Speaker 9 (55:24):
Okay, okay, she wants to share your she wants to
share your gift. Hold on herself, hold on to say here,
I sat st Okay, So we want to We want
this the racism gift to be big enough that Michi
could share it too. Okay, talk about your talk about
(55:45):
your racism gift. What do you want it to look like?
Because a lot of me, I'm telling you a lot
of my a lot of my Trumpish friends thought the
racism issue was getting ready to be handled in terms.
Speaker 10 (55:57):
Of offbody does reflect the multiculture in this of our
nation period.
Speaker 13 (56:11):
Yeah, But the thing is mac just because you look
like me don't mean you think like me. So that's
the other part of that. So that's why I said
my first thing is I want educated, qualified people, and
I think that if we have a voting population that
is educated properly and and isn't being dumbed down in
(56:33):
the public school system.
Speaker 9 (56:35):
Let me ask you all this.
Speaker 10 (56:36):
And I'm sorry, I'm sorry in order for you to
say properly, is you're you're you're taking this chance of
judgment interest with what you think is correct?
Speaker 11 (56:50):
Is proper yeah?
Speaker 9 (56:51):
Yeah, yeah, yeah. Because some people think that it's okay
to decorate their trees. Hold on, some people think it's
okay to decorate their trees with the bodies of grown
ass black men who used to be alive. So values
and judgments, Yeah, that's why we're talking now because.
Speaker 12 (57:11):
Excuse me, judgment.
Speaker 9 (57:14):
Remember, don't run away from making judgments.
Speaker 11 (57:17):
I went to.
Speaker 13 (57:18):
School in the West, I went to school in Southeast,
and public schools taught different things. And that's my issue
is we accept.
Speaker 9 (57:28):
We accept the fact. Please, let's not argue the fact,
miss it. Please, let's not argue the fact. We agree
that judgments take place, and there's only room for there's
only room for so much, such as we only have
an hour, so we have to judge. Ask that what
we're going to say and what we're going to present,
that's a given. That's a given. The thing that isn't
(57:51):
given is the direction of our energy flow. Every day.
Sometimes we get caught up chasing things that are interesting,
and sometimes we're lucky enough to focus on things that
are important. And I think that I thank you both
today for the energy that you put in to help
us understand that we can easily be distracted by things
(58:15):
that are so interesting that they could take up hours
and weeks and years of our time, where indeed we
will win when we focus on the thing that is important,
and that's the future of our children, the future of
our grandchildren, the future of our nation, the future of
our planet. God bless you guys for thinking about it
(58:37):
and having solutions. And I look forward to talking to
you again. Thank you, guys. God bless you. Thank you guys,
and the crew hell, thank you, thank you. This is
impact tast me. I look forward to next week under
two circumstances. One, the Good Lord's willing too to creek.
Don't rise, but don't get caught up that creek. We're
(59:01):
not dead.
Speaker 15 (59:02):
B NBC News on CACAA LOMLA sponsored by Teamsters Local
(59:50):
nineteen thirty two, Protecting the Future of Working Families Teamsters
nineteen thirty two. Dot Org.
Speaker 12 (01:00:01):
Well, Praise the Lord God.
Speaker 5 (01:00:02):
Bless you in the name of the Father, Jesus the
Son and the Holy Ghost.
Speaker 12 (01:00:07):
This is Pastor Adrian McLellan with